Your decision should be explained and justified, don't you agree?
not being too smart myself- I read thisQuoteSecond, there have been studies done as I listed in my post on Bill Peckham's page showing the adverse health effects of renal donation to the majority of those that donated and much evidence that shows that it does not in the least change the status of their poverty. In fact, with the adverse health consequences well documented in several studies, many donors find themselves in a worse situation since they are no longer able to work at their prior level.not being concerned with the poverty aspect- but the donating is harmful aspect....Is this just because of the donation happening in a third world country- or does that apply to everyone who donates everywhere? I thought it was not harmful in any way to the donor?
Second, there have been studies done as I listed in my post on Bill Peckham's page showing the adverse health effects of renal donation to the majority of those that donated and much evidence that shows that it does not in the least change the status of their poverty. In fact, with the adverse health consequences well documented in several studies, many donors find themselves in a worse situation since they are no longer able to work at their prior level.
Glitter: The health effects on live kidney donors of donating an organ have been measured over thousands of patients for over a thirty-year period post-transplant, and no net negative effects of any statitstical significance have been observed, other than a slight, clinically insignificant increase in blood pressure. In fact, one Swedish study even found that kidney donors typically live a LONGER than normal lifespan. (See I. Fehrman-Eckholm, et al, "Kidney Donors Live Longer," Transplantation, vol. 64, no. 7 (1997) pp. 976-978. Occasionally you hear rhetoric from opponents of organ purchasing about all the physical harm this is doing to the donors, but the science simply does not support this.
OK this is the way I see it. Selling organs isn't right especially from the people that most of the discussions are about. Your wanting to "harvest" organs from unhealthy people that from the sounds of it live in squaller. To me this would be compairable to me going to Chicago, finding a bum and telling him I'll give him money if he sells me his Kidney. Even if he was a match who in their right mind would want that kidney first off and secondly is that bum going to have a better quality of life because he has one less kidney and some cash in his pocket? Just because he donated a kidney does not mean that he suddenly will live in clean conditions and be able to take care of himself. He will spend that money on booze or other things and in no time flat end up back in the same filth he came from. He will most likely get extremely sick and possibly die because of not taking care of the surgical area causing an infection that wont get treated because he can't afford it. So now once again you have 1 person with a good kidney and someone else dead or dying not 2 people with good kidneys and all smiles. All the stats shown in this thread that are in favor of it seem to be from various unrelated parts of the world being lumped together as 1 factual mass involving healthy individuals instead of the target audience. Until I see more compelling arguments I stand by this belief and my statement.
Zach, even in an autocracy, administrative law principles presuppose that decisions which purport to be reasonable carry a moral duty to those affected by them to demonstrate their reasonableness by stating and defending their reasoning. That principle is not a matter of democracy, but of the basic human right of people affected by another's power not to be treated like dirt.
Quote from: Hawkeye on July 10, 2008, 01:05:04 PMOK this is the way I see it. Selling organs isn't right especially from the people that most of the discussions are about. Your wanting to "harvest" organs from unhealthy people that from the sounds of it live in squaller. To me this would be compairable to me going to Chicago, finding a bum and telling him I'll give him money if he sells me his Kidney. Even if he was a match who in their right mind would want that kidney first off and secondly is that bum going to have a better quality of life because he has one less kidney and some cash in his pocket? Just because he donated a kidney does not mean that he suddenly will live in clean conditions and be able to take care of himself. He will spend that money on booze or other things and in no time flat end up back in the same filth he came from. He will most likely get extremely sick and possibly die because of not taking care of the surgical area causing an infection that wont get treated because he can't afford it. So now once again you have 1 person with a good kidney and someone else dead or dying not 2 people with good kidneys and all smiles. All the stats shown in this thread that are in favor of it seem to be from various unrelated parts of the world being lumped together as 1 factual mass involving healthy individuals instead of the target audience. Until I see more compelling arguments I stand by this belief and my statement.I just want to first off say that I do not believe in selling organs period. I also do not believe in receiving organs from unhealthy people. Now, the only thing I wanted to say in regards to this post was that comment: "He will spend that money on booze or other things and in no time flat end up back in the same filth he came from."That is very stereotypical, rude, and the list goes on. To categorize someone who is homeless into one group and that being a group that only spends what money they get on booze, and to imply they choose to live in filth and that's what they will always end up going back to, is disgusting to say. There are PLENTY of people who are homeless by no fault of their own and any money they get is spent on them trying to survive and get out of the situation they are in. There are PLENTY of people who are homeless with children and it is no fault of their own and they would give anything to be off the streets and sure as hell don't spend what help they get on booze. I feel bad for people who are in reality homeless and have ended up in that situation trying their hardest to not end up there and can't get the help they need due to people like you who assume they will spend it on booze. How sad.Of course there is a group of people who fit into that category, but the way you said it... you put everyone into it.
Here is another follow up article on the Declaration of Istanbul that presents some interesting commentary on the issue.http://health.asiaone.com/Health/News/Story/A1Story20080710-75872.html
The medical profession, in my experience, knows so little about medical ethics -- which I have never observed to be a required course at any medical school